Data upadated 2020-07-05 11:07:41. World data are from Worldometers. National and state-level mortality, case, and testing data are from Johns-Hopkins University. County and city-level mortality and case data are from the New York Times.
There have been 11,372,202 confirmed covid-19 cases and 532,864 deaths worldwide.
| country | Cases | Deaths | New Cases | New Deaths |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA | 2,935,770 | 132,318 | 45,182 | 254 |
| Brazil | 1,578,376 | 64,365 | 35,035 | 1,111 |
| Russia | 674,515 | 10,027 | 6,632 | 168 |
| India | 673,904 | 19,279 | 24,015 | 610 |
| Peru | 299,080 | 10,412 | 3,481 | 186 |
| Spain | 297,625 | 28,385 | 0 | 0 |
| Chile | 291,847 | 6,192 | 3,758 | 141 |
| UK | 284,900 | 44,198 | 624 | 67 |
| Mexico | 245,251 | 29,843 | 6,740 | 654 |
| Italy | 241,419 | 34,854 | 235 | 21 |
There have been 2,838,465 confirmed covid-19 cases and 122,464 deaths in the United States.
| Date | Cases | Deaths | New Cases | New Deaths |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020-07-04 | 2,838,465 | 122,464 | 52,406 | 306 |
| 2020-07-03 | 2,786,059 | 122,158 | 57,562 | 635 |
| 2020-07-02 | 2,728,497 | 121,523 | 53,684 | 670 |
| 2020-07-01 | 2,674,813 | 120,853 | 52,982 | 701 |
| 2020-06-30 | 2,621,831 | 120,152 | 44,358 | 596 |
| 2020-06-29 | 2,577,473 | 119,556 | 36,490 | 330 |
| 2020-06-28 | 2,540,983 | 119,226 | 42,161 | 271 |
This section summarizes state-level data. State-level graphs are shown for the largest 15 states by population, which account for NaN percent of the total U.S. population.
| State | Cases | Deaths |
|---|---|---|
| NY | 396,598 | 24,896 |
| NJ | 173,033 | 15,189 |
| MA | 109,838 | 8,172 |
| IL | 147,734 | 7,224 |
| PA | 89,375 | 6,749 |
| CA | 254,745 | 6,313 |
| MI | 72,581 | 6,218 |
| CT | 46,717 | 4,335 |
| FL | 190,052 | 3,803 |
| LA | 63,289 | 3,278 |
| State | Cases | Deaths |
|---|---|---|
| NY | 396,598 | 24,896 |
| CA | 254,745 | 6,313 |
| TX | 191,790 | 2,608 |
| FL | 190,052 | 3,803 |
| NJ | 173,033 | 15,189 |
| IL | 147,734 | 7,224 |
| MA | 109,838 | 8,172 |
| AZ | 94,553 | 1,805 |
| GA | 93,319 | 2,857 |
| PA | 89,375 | 6,749 |
Interpretation of differences in case rates across states is complicated by the fact that those states that do more thorough testing will invariably uncover more cases. A lower positive test rate is an indication that a state is doing more comprehensive testing since, when testing is rationed, only those individuals who are more likely to test positive are typically tested. The following chart compares the one-week increase in detected cases to the the number of tests administered by each state relative to population. The states of greatest current concern are those with both a large increase in detected cases and a relatively small increase in tests. These states lie in the upper-left of the chart.
| State | Cases | Deaths | New Cases | New Deaths |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DC | 10,447 | 557 | 12 | 2 |
| MD | 69,341 | 3,236 | 380 | 13 |
| VA | 65,109 | 1,849 | 716 | 4 |